Trade Facilitation: Impossible Without Facilitating Logistics Contribution of the Global Express Association (GEA) 2008 WTO Public Forum 25 September 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Trade Infrastructure: Express Delivery Services March 15, 2002 Scott Hallford Vice President, Government Affairs FedEx Express.
Advertisements

1 1 Trade World Business Council for Sustainable Development Geneva, September 2007 Doing Business with the World - The new role of corporate leadership.
Global Analysis International Trade.
G LOBAL E CONOMICS Chapter 7. I MPORTS AND E XPORTS Importsproducts brought in from a foreign country. Exportsproducts sent to a foreign country for sale.
1 Trade facilitation: Benefits and Capacity Building for Customs UNECE International Forum on Trade Facilitation, May 2003 Kunio Mikuriya Deputy.
Global E-Commerce Back to Table of Contents.
Section 6.1 The Global Marketplace
Chapter 4 Global Analysis
Understand the role of business in the global economy. 1.
Business in a Global Economy
©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Unit 13 International Marketing
Introduction to Business
3 rd Executive Forum on Trade Facilitation Paperless Trade in International Supply Chains: Enhancing Efficiency and Security Technology as Enabler of Innovation.
ECON International Economics
3 Business in the Global Economy 3-1 International Business Basics
International Business 9e
Globalization of Markets : - Some Trends and Implications for Norwegian Industry Arild Aspelund, PhD.
1 Trade Facilitation A narrow sense –A reduction/streamlining of the logistics of moving goods through ports or the documentation requirements at a customs.
1 CEE Areas of Specialization Transportation Construction Geotechnical Structures Environmental Water Resources.
“Trade Facilitation in the WTO Context” High-Level Policy Segment of the Committee for Trade, Industry and Enterprise Development United Nations Economic.
International Business Chapter 4. Independent Practice Research the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Department Examine and explain 2 regulations regarding.
Presented by : Nadine Youssry Soha El-Baktoushy Walaa Samy Presented to : Dr.Nagwa Mohamed.
The Multinational Corporation and Globalization
Business in the Global Economy
Chapter 1 Globalization of markets and competition.
Chapter 7.1 Trade Between Nations.
Principles of Marketing Lecture-41. Summary of Lecture-40.
Business in a Global Economy
Geneva, May 2007 Trade facilitation: Global trends in trade logistics and how they relate to trade facilitation measures and the.
The Effects of Globalization. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the world was divided over a number of political, cultural, and economic issues.
1 Chapter 7 Section 1 Global Economics Objectives Describe how international trade benefits consumers. Explain the significance of currency exchange rates.
Part II: Business Environment Introduction to Business 3e 6 Copyright © 2004 South-Western. All rights reserved. Assessing Global Conditions.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Principles of Business, 8e C H A P T E R 3 SLIDE International Business Basics The Global.
Trade Facilitation, the WTO, and Development: An Overview John S. Wilson, The World Bank Tsunehiro Otsuki, Osaka University.
1 Chapter 8 Economic Integration. 2 Learning Objectives To review types of economic integration among countries To examine the costs and benefits of integrative.
GHSGT Review Economics. Unit 1 – Fundamental Concepts of Economics.
COMPETITION IN THE MARKETPLACE. BUYERS & SELLERS  BUYERS = CONSUMERS  SELLERS = PRODUCERS BUYERS & SELLERS COME TOGETHER TO EXCHANGE THINGS OF VALUE.
Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group, October 28, 2010 The Canada-US Trade and Investment Relationship.
Canada’s Asia-Pacific Gateway and Corridor Initiative 2006.
Chapter 6 The Political Economy of International Trade 1.
Forces Driving the Borderless World
International Business Chapter 6 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.
Chapter 26- Comparing Economic Systems. Why Nations Trade Exported goods are sold to other countries; imported goods are purchased from abroad; the US.
Chapter 3 Business in the Global Economy. 3-1 International Business Basics Goals: ◦ Describe importing and exporting activities. ◦ Compare balance of.
International Trade. The Global Marketplace The interdependence of nations The benefits of international trade Government involvement in International.
1 Workshop on Growth and Employment December 12-13, 2005 Enhancing Export Competitiveness for Supporting High Growth Tercan Baysan and Sandeep Mahajan.
Economics. Economic Basics Vocabulary: Economics: Study of how people meet their wants and needs Scarcity: Having a limited quantity of resources to meet.
Introduction to Business, Business in a Global Economy Slide 1 of 64 Global Competition Global competition often leads to trade disputes between countries.
GLOBALIZATION Lecture 01. Introduction 2 The effects of this trend can be seen in the cars people drive in the food people eat in the jobs where people.
MGT301 Principles of Marketing Lecture-41. Summary of Lecture-40.
FIATA RAME May 2016 Addis Ababa
Globalization & Business opportunities
International Trade Chapter 17.
International Political Economy, Trade, and Development
Chapter 26- Comparing Economic Systems
AIM: How can U. S. trade impact us as consumers
Business in the Global Economy
Globalization.
Unit 9: Economics World Economy & Trade.
CHAPTER 4 GLOBAL ANALYSIS
Warm up List all the resources needed to make a pencil and then use your phone to find out where each resource can be found in the world.
Unit 9: Economics World Economy & Trade.
Chapter 4 Global Analysis
Session 2 – African Continental Approach and Challenges
The TIR Convention and transit issues
Trade Facilitation: Impossible Without Facilitating Logistics
International Economics
Chapter 6 Business-Government Trade Relations
Facilitating SME participation in international trade
Presentation transcript:

Trade Facilitation: Impossible Without Facilitating Logistics Contribution of the Global Express Association (GEA) 2008 WTO Public Forum 25 September 2008

The First Great Logistics Model

A Landmark in Logistics Innovation

More Landmarks in Logistics Innovation

Logistics Today The emergence of a global economy with transactions occurring over greater distances makes efficient movement of goods increasingly important. Modern logistics managers (and competent governments) are engaged in squeezing time and cost out of supply chains; ultimately this benefits consumers and global standards of living. Air freight, and express delivery in particular, have largely removed distance as a decisive factor in trade.

Express Delivery Creates New Trade International express delivery companies carry US$2.4 trillion in goods across borders annually. This is trade that might otherwise not occur. Because of the high quality and end-to-end nature of services provided, express delivery is a higher-priced transport option. If traders could maintain the same levels of service, speed, and reliability using less expensive transport options they almost certainly would. It is reasonable to conclude that much of the merchandise trade carried by international express delivery companies occurs because of the availability of express delivery.

Express Delivery Has Special Value for SMEs Globalization offers many opportunities for SMEs Online SMEs have been especially successful in developing global markets. However, making the perfect shipping arrangements each day for demanding customers in many foreign countries is an enormous challenge for a small business. By integrating all of the steps required to move products to customers, express delivery companies place world- class logistics within reach of small companies everywhere, and allow them to share in the benefits of a global marketplace.

SME Success Story #1

SME Success Story #2

SME Success Story #3

Why Governments Should Care About Improving Logistics WTO success in reducing trade barriers will create new opportunities for many exporters – particularly SMEs - that currently have limited prospects for growth within their national or regional markets. But good logistics are critical to exploiting the new opportunities. Expanded global competition may force domestic exporters to improve their competitiveness by developing new sources of materials for their own production. In response to their own competitive pressures, customers in all parts of the world will become more demanding about speed and reliability of delivery. Without better logistics the effectiveness of tax incentives offered by governments for investments in new production will be undermined. Governments know this but reforms that would improve logistics efficiency are stymied by official schizophrenia.

Policy Choice for Governments That Affects The Quality of Logistics: National Development Objectives or Domestic Politics

Key Official Restrictions Faced By Express Delivery Companies Anti-competitive practices of government-owned or authorized monopolies Obsolete restrictions on foreign investment and cabotage –Aviation –Ground Inefficient border procedures

Anti-competitive practices of government- owned or authorized monopolies Well into the era of a global economy all but a few of the WTOs 151 members maintain public postal monopolies, many barely viable. In some countries monopoly postal operators and private delivery companies co-exist peacefully and even enter into partnerships. However, in several major developing markets the postal operator acts in contravention of national development plans and in near defiance of economic ministries.

Restrictions on foreign investment and cabotage (aviation) No industry in the world is under greater stress or more in need of rationalization. We must move away from an aviation world dictated by 60- year-old rules and based on flags on aircraft tails. We cannot go on with the archaic system: we need to merge, we need to integrate. IATA DG Giovanni Bisignani Bankruptcy rather than policy is driving reform and liberalization of aviation rules, despite the resistance of governments.

Restrictions on foreign investment and cabotage (ground) Fifteen years after the NAFTA was approved restrictions on cross-border trucking services have not been removed. Freight crossing the border is loaded and unloaded three times at a minimum before it reaches its destination, largely offsetting the benefits of duty elimination. GATT Article V – Freedom of Transit – is widely ignored; a promising Doha effort to give it greater effect now appears to have failed. The World Banks 2007 Logistics Performance Index shows that among the worst performers are landlocked countries of Africa and Central Asia and their neighbors that (unless they have oil or gas revenues) are also among the poorest nations.

Inefficient border procedures Still too many paper documents Limited capability to receive release information electronically in advance of arrival Absence of automated risk assessment makes customs less effective and fosters official corruption Goods held hostage pending completion of all procedures Chaotic gangs of agencies other than customs at the borders; no single window Lukewarm commitment by key governments to harmonized cargo security regimes Dohas finest memorial could be preservation of its trade facilitation work

Logistics Liberalization: the Next Reform Frontier? Even in developed countries, logistics providers operate under rules that have barely changed in a century. WTO members have learned that elimination of tariffs and quotas is not sufficient without trade facilitation Now they must learn that trade facilitation is not sufficient without logistics reform.

The global economy has changed, but as these images remind us...

No matter when or where you are in business...

The things you sell must still be delivered to customers.